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Aurora Campbell

Aurora Campbell is a mural artist and illustrator. Using fine intricate line work to capture organic forms, Aurora’s work is bold, raw and vibrant. Her concepts are conceived from observational sketches, creating a site-specific and evocative outcome. A passionate and avid drawer, Aurora takes any opportunity to put lines down – sketching in nature, going to life drawing classes or capturing people in public spaces. Currently living in her hometown of Brisbane, she has spent the last 11 years practising in Melbourne, teaching life drawing, painting murals, and exhibiting regularly.

Bronik

Painting since 2009, the peruvian artist based in Melbourne creates a colorful world inspired by feminity and nature.

By Chloe Joy

I mix lettering and calligraphy with patterns and textures to create art that asks questions and brings life to the viewer.

David Don

David Don is a Brisbane-based artist whose practice investigates the intersection of contemporary art, architecture, space, and identity. Through his practice, David seeks to explore how the built environment and spaces we inhabit offer a narrative beyond their utility. Working across a range of media including animation, video installation and painting, his work creatively and speculatively examines the notion of national identity and its relationship within in a broader context of Australia’s post-colonial history.

Desirai

A Meanjin (Brisbane) based, Gunggari, illustration & digital artist. Art helps me to express myself as I often can’t find the words to do so. I like to incorporate culture into my artworks as naturally as it lies within my life. Always there, deep rooted and causing a constant current within. Emotion is what heavily inspires my artworks. A lot of strength can be channelled and learnt from emotions of pain, anger and disappointment. So much emotion can be portrayed without the need for words. My artworks are like fragmented pieces of my own emotional & mental states. Apart of me hopes my creations will empower those (especially Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander women) who can see a small part of themselves reflecting back through the artworks.

Drapl

Drapl is a Brisbane based street artist who has been painting graffiti murals for 23 years. His passion for life and painting murals over Australian cities and outback continues to grow. From grain silos to canvas work drapl is a very versatile artist who has a wealth of expertise in all types of painting media and creative building.

Drule

Dan is a professional mural artist based in Brisbane. He has been interested in and painting street art most of his life and about 15 years decided to start his own business as a professional artist. He started out drawing and painting with aerosol and developed his skills to include all styles, including his favourite abstract and realism styles.

Featonby

Featonby is an abstract artist and calligrapher from Aotearoa based in Brisbane. His style is intuitive and experimental using a hypercolour pallete which brings his pieces to life. Featonby’s work draws inspiration from his own story, using references from his life and the immediate world around him.

Fivust

Integrating his signature style of explosive colour tone and mood, Fivust has developed a distinct style that carries a fun element of surprise everywhere. Whether on the streets, in galleries, and many more. Fivust admires the spectrum of possibility and flexibility of a human alter ego in creating his works. For him, it is fascinating that each of them has their own alter ego that can be expressed in so many ways. Growing up enjoying comics, manga, pop culture, and other Japanese references, Fivust’s works — in graffiti, paintings, tattoos, and others — are heavily influenced by those.

George Goodnow

George Goodnow is a multidisciplinary artist currently living in Naarm (Melbourne). Their practice incorporates painting, sculpture, and the use of salvaged materials to produce site-specific installations. By fabricating fictional architectures and objects, or adjusting existing architectures, George considers how spaces reflect, orientate, and hold bodies. Recent work explores feelings of disorientation, binaries, and queerness within suburban and urban landscapes. George has exhibited and produced public art installations around Australia and overseas, and has collaborated on projects with Platform Arts Geelong, AMBUSH Gallery, Science Gallery Melbourne, the City of Melbourne, and City of Ballarat councils. They were also the curator of ‘Intermission Project’ at the Collingwood Yards in 2018.